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The New Canadian — August 23, 1974

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Page 1

Acupuncture Nay Become "Quackery In The Western World
The; group of 12
physicians
By c.g. McDaniel
and four others representing the
, AP Science Writer
CHICAGO, —
Acupuncture American Medical
Association
should not be allowed to become J returned from China.
Its initial observations were
a new kind of quackery in the
telephoned
to the AMA in Chic­
— Western world, says a group of
American doctors just back fr- ago from Hong Kong.
The report says outstanding
om China.
While the ancient practice a- work is being done in China in
ppears to have some beneficial replanation of severed aims, .le­
uses in China, the ~ doctors rep­ gs,- hands, feet, fingers, and to­
ort, its' use in the United States es and in The treatment of bur­
should continue to be regarded ns. ■ .
It also . says, important progas experimental.

ress has ■ been mad e ‘in the eradication of venereal dis ease and
the control of the many other
public health hazards which we­
re a massive national, disability
as recently as, three decades ago.”
The practice of
acupuncture
varies greatly, the doctors said,
and pointed out that most dis­
eases are' self-limiting — mea­
ning they will go away untrea­
ted.
_
There is 'therefore no way of

telling whether acupuncture oi*
other traditional forms of Chi­
nese medicine have any real ef­
fect on the treatment of medi­
cal problems, the doctors said.
' Acupuncture is .used in only
about 15 pea* cent of all major
surgery, they said. And
they
pointed but that it is incorrect
to represent it as anesthesia.
“It is more, properly analgesia
or still more accurately ‘hypal­
gesia’ -— a. reduced perception
of pain,” they said.

Say U.S. M.D.’s
Psychological
preparation. of
the patient by the anesthetist is
important, they pointed out.
They reported that some pa­
tients tolerate major 'surgery
quite well under acupuncture alone or with minimal dosages of
•anesthetics.
Many other patients show si­
gnificant discomfort under acu­
puncture and it will- not • work
at all' for a substantial num­
ber, they found.
. Cont. Oh Page 3

■lllllinilllllllllllllllllirillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIHIHHIIIIHnHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllinillllllllllllllllllllllHIHIIIIIIIIIllllllW^

The llctt) Canadian
An Independent Organ for Canadians of Japanese Origin*
huLh*™^

FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1974

............

Toronto, Ont.
"""""""'"“'“I'"""....... iiiimMnmi.imiinmi...........

The Other Side Of The Coin

"Surprising
Says European American
LOS ANGELES — One of the
most surprising things in Calif­
ornia to a newcomer from the
East is the . large number of Asians here — with pure Ameri­
can accents. *

They make up almost 2 percent
or ovei* 100,000 of the total populatibn of Los Angeles County.
(The. Chinese, the next largest
Asian-Am erican community he­
re, number about half that.)
. A total of 4 per cent of Los
Angeles’ population is of Asian
descent, including not only Ja­
panese and Chinese but also . Ko­
reans, Filipinos, Samoans,' and
Thais.

You'll
Like It.
OKAYAMA, Japan. — A pri­
vate laboratory in Okayama cla­
ims to have developed a ilonpolluting plastic made. from starch instead of oil and it can be
eaten by humans.

Japan Faces Mounting Infl
Pressure In Whaling Dispute

come extinct by the end of this
indiscriminate
TOKYO.

International century due to
pressure
is
increasing
for slaughter.
Those who. oppose
whaling
a
total
ban
on
Japa­
nese whaling,, with the adher­ usually calim that the whale is
ents of the ban claiming that in danger of extinction, that the
Asian-Americans are
trying
the whale is in danger of extin­ whale is a “lovable and intelli­
to keep the old ways alive, tho­
creature
disappearing
ction, and the Japanese holding gent”
ugh.
that they are “scientifically” ma­ from the earth, that whales can
On a recent weekend, volupt­
are
king use of an important sour­ suffer ^ unduly when they
killed,
and
That
Japan'
can
ea­
uous lotuses with their large but
ce of protein.
sily find substitutes for whale
delicate pink flowers and elep­
At the last annual meeting of meat.
Japanese-Americans
of
..
the
hantine leaves were in their full
the International Whaling* Com­
In
answer
to
such
arguments,
glory, though in smoggy air, in fourth generation find themsel­
TOKYO. —1 Recently . Nissan
Echo Park in downtown
Los ves strangers to their ancestral Motor Co., Ltd., makers of the mission (IWC) in London, Ja- Japanese Government officials,
pan’s catch quota for next year scientists and whaling industry
language, and there seems to
Angeles. •
i
Datsun,
announced
it
would
re
­
was reduced by about 20
per leaders say that most of them
be a growing identity crisis.
duce its export shipments to the cent below that, for this year.
-It was the perfect timing for
are groundless and
emotional
The initial publication of “Ja­ United :States .by about a third
the third annual Day of the Lo­
It. is Considered certain that rather than scientific.
tus festival where, with a hard­ de, the Asian-American Identity” this October.
the hunting of the fin whale, a
“We are vexed at the allega­
ly a Caucasian in view, 30,000 last May points to a growing in­
The company said the decisi- major 'Source of whale meat, aAsian-Americans came, together terest among these Americans in. on resulted from sluggish sales ccountirig for more than half of tion that Japan is chiefly res­
for two days of celebrating. Th­
on the American market.
I Japan’s whale catch, will be ba-? ponsible for the reduced numb­
(Cont. on P. 2)
ey could watch a dramatic Sa­
■-------- ---- ——-------- —
--------- - —nned completely at the next a- ers of marine mammals. Euro­
pean countries and the United
moan fire dance, or a Chinese
nnual IWC meeting.
; ribbon dance, or be entranced
And then the catching of the States desisted from whaling oby the antics" of a baby Asian
sei whale may be forbidden in nly after they had overhunted
whales for a long time
and
elephant as plump and hairy as
TOKYO. — Japanese fishing swarm to feed on these crusta- 1976.
hot
a coconut.
Western antiwhaling activists found that whaling would
companies have recently begun cea. A United Nations fishery
pay any more,” . Kei Inoue , a
200 have come to Japan for the ca­
Asian food,. American speech - I eyeing the feasibility of the o- survey estimated at least
Cont. on P. 4
mpaign and letters, from abroad
' It was an extraordinary com clan’s smallest and most abun- million tons of the planktons are
in the Antarctic annua- have arrived by the bundle for
glomeration of Asian foods (Ko- dant organism, the plankton, to massed
Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka
;
rean kimchee and Filipino ste- | replace whales as a source of lly
J Japanese chemical laboratories and the Emperor, appealing for
amed rice flour) and American food.
■It is the upshot of loud de­ { have reported that the Antarctic their help in protecting the wha­
flags;' of* Asian dress and Ame­
mands by the world’s conserva­ ’planktons are rich in tryptop­ les from possible extinction as
rican speech. x
han, an amino acid that forms a result of man’s excessive cat­
“Is this in English?” ^visi­ tionists that Japan, the Soviet
'
only an important nutrient. In fact, ching.
tor asks Jimmy S. Gozawa, pre­ Union, and Norway, the
Many of the letters have been
protein
sident of the
Asian-American three countries still engaging in 'They claim, this basic
TOKYO —'Japan’s foreign mi­
1 content in the Antarctic plank­ written by schoolchildren all owhaling,
halt

slaughtering
to
Cultural Association, as he pic­
tons is richer than that found in ver the world, inspired by drives nistry admitted recently that the
ks up a copy, of . “Jade” maga-. extinction” the world’s largest
conducted by humane and envir­ United States has three Overbeef.
1
zine, subtitled '“The
Asian-A- mammals.
Food and pharmaceutical ma­ onmental societies in Europe and The-Horizon radar sites in Ja­
The conservationists .seek a
merican identity.”
pan to give early warning of a
~
nufacturers as. well as Japanese America.
A middle-aged Japanese wom­ complete ban on whaling on wh­
/ .
Antiwhalihg groups in the missile attack.
more4 fishing companies are reported
an interjects with a laugh: “It ich Japan has depended
The head of ministry’s Ameri­
racing to develop processes to United States recently launched
better be. I can only read a lit­ than any other nation as .an
can
bureau, Toshio
Yamazaki,
render the Crustacea appealing a joint-boycott of Japanese and
tle Japanese. To write a letter in important source of protein.
Soviet products until-the two co­ told the upper house of the Diet
.
Planktons exist in almost all as feed for humans.
Japanese with a* dictionary ta­
OTH
They admit this is a formid­ untries stop killing the huge o- (parliament) there were
the world’s oceans and
seas.
kes two weeks.”'
radar
sites
at
U.S.
bases
at
To­
They are the source of food for able task because the organism cean mammals. Japan and the
Identity crisis
many ‘ fish and even whales, but in its imtreated form is unpala­ Soviet Union are the only nati­ korozawa, north of Tokyo, Chi­
ons in the world, that continue tose- on the northermost main
Mr. Gozawa himself conced­ so far man has hardly exploited table to most people.
There is also a need to rid the pelagic whaling and account for island of Hokkaido, and at Aes that he learned Japanese in them for food.

Planktons are plant and ani­ Crustacea of a reddish pigment 80 to 90 per cent of the annual wase in Okinawa.
. - the U.S. Army and thanks to'
Foreign Minister Toshio Ki­
the Army subsequently, became a mal organisms, mostly micros­ compound which tend to. .appear whale kill.
Friends of the Earth, a ’ ma­ mura said the OTH radar did
U.S. diplomat, although he now copic in size. They exist in wa­ as. blotch on the skin if the pro
ters at depths penetrable by sun­ duct is consumed regularly ove- jor U.S. nature conservationists not constitute nuclear equipm­
is in insurance.
_
organization, argues the the sur- ent, and that it benefited Japan
er a long period.
The ‘ Japanese-Americans in light. •
they vival of the whale is in danger. by acting as a deterrent aga-.
Fishing companies say
companies.
v- h Japanese fishing
Los Angeles are a, tightly wow
drastic . inst nuclear attack, He said Jaen community living largely in interested
in>the shrimp-like have yet to develop a commer- and that unless some
the suburb of Gardena and in planktons are massed in the A-. cially usable equipment tp har- measures are taken within se- . pan depends on the U.S. for nuveral years, the whale will be-1 clear protection.
“Little Tokyo,” near.City Hall. ’ ntartic; ocean
where jjyhales . vest the planktons,

By KYOICHI MIYAGAWA

Datsun Exports
To United States

Suffer Cut Back

Plankton Eyed As New Food Source

U.S. Radar Sites

8

Against Attack

9

Page 2

Friday, August 23, 1974

PAGE 2

. 'Surprising

. (Cent, from Page One)

IS

their Asian heritage.' '
x
rity groups iri changing its im/So, ‘too, does the “Asian Pride ‘ age.
1
A
leaflet
asks
:

What
is
soci
Program at California State University, Los Angeles. The Asi­ ety telling to an Asian. ‘ child
an Pride -Program; is in its third watching the TV commercial in
year of funding by the Greater which the'white man using pro­
girl
Los Angeles . Community Action tein hair spray wins the
Program (GLACAP) and seems over his Asian ping-pong oppo­
Asian
as-concerned as other U.S. mino- nent, even though the
wins the . game ? The '-stereotype
of the unappealing, awkward, AThos. T. Onizuka, Q.C., sian male is perpetuated, leavi­
ng a negative image with that
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
child of riot only' Asian males,
AND NOTARY ^PUBLIC
but of himself.”
425 UNIVERSITY AVE.
The Japanese of Los Angeles
SUITE 615, TORONTO
may have beeri a hidden riiinoriPhone 363-5002
ty because of cultural assimila­
(Res.) 493-2457
tion, but more are. anxious
to
be viewed with a distinct identity.

|

All-Female Team To Attempt
Mt. Eeverest Climb

The New Canadian
A member of Ethnic Press
Association of Ontario
Second Class mall
No. D-0366
PUBLISHED ON EVERY TUESDAY
AND FRIDAY

T. UMEZUKI Publisher
K. C. TSUMURA
English. Section Editor
C.R. CHIBA
Summer English Editor
KEN MORI
Japanese Section Editor ■

TOKYO. — A team of Japa­ 19.70.
Other notable Japanese succe­
nese women will set out for Ne­
sses
in the Himalayas include:
pal next February, .in an attem­
SUBSCRIPTION
May 6, 1970 — Professional
pt to become the first of their
$7.00
for Six Months
an
sex to climb the. world’s highest skier Yuichiro Miura with
$11.00 a Year
oxygen mask - glided down the
mountain, Mt. Everest.>
This will be only one of at slopes of Mt. Everets from a479 QUEEN ST. WEST
least 11 Japanese expeditions’ to bout 1,000 feet below the sum­
Toronto, Ont. M5V-2A9
mit.
the Himalayas in early 1975.
366-5005
May 12, 1970 — Three Japa­
A. Japanese love of mount­
aineering has developed in re­ nese and Sherpa guide reached
cent years into - a major sport, the summit of Everest on May
with men and women challeng­ 11 and 12. The first Japanese
CHARTERED
ing the world’s highest and mo­ to climb to the top of the. world
ACCOUNTANT
were Katsutoshi
Hirabayashi,
st difficult peaks.
v
Help Wanted
2261 Lakeshore Blvd. W.
The mountainous Japanese, ai’- Teruo Matsuura, and Naomi UeSherpa
chipelago provides many local o- mu na, accompanied by
Toronto, Ont. M8V-1A6
PART-TIME employment at a
Chotari.
pportumties
for
climbing
and
hi
­
„ ■ .
v
i
$100 a week (or more). Must
Phone 252-3513
Setsuko Watanabe, the • only ;
' .
. ■
,
TOKYO.'— The Japanese go­ king, ^-including the sacred Mt.
.
shave a car. Work mornings, afvernment decided recently to im­ Fuji, the country’s highest mo- woman on the 39-member Eve- 1 temoons or evenings. Advance
first
pose import controls on
raw untain and dormant volcano at rest expedition, was the
to $250/week. For
interview,
woman
to
reach
an
altitude
of phone: 635-7854
silk in- an attempt * to halt a pri­ 12,385 feet.
(Downsview).
. Auto-Fire-Life
16,198 feet. .
ce decline in the domestic mar­
The first Japanese conquest
All Fdrms Of
i Teams sent annually
ket,
'
Domestic Help Wanted _
of
Everest, was made by the .(So­
INSURANCE
’ Officials said the decision, ma-Japanese
climbers uth Col route, used earlier by
Leading
de at the vice ministers’ meeting,
RELIABLE and dependable wo­
Consult
now are turning increasingly to successful British, Indian, and
will be approved. It was expla­
man for young Japanese Cana­
foreign ranges, including
the American expeditions.
.
ined as a relief measure
for
dian family moving to StreetHimalayas, the European Alps,
But the Japanese made histor sville. Look after two school-a­
silk breeders and spinners suf­
and the mountains of Alaska.
ry when two men —' Hisashi I- ged children.Light
Home 759-8317
fering from "low market prices.
household
Japan has dispatched 12 to 15 shiguro and Yasuo Kato — clim­
The control measures banned
duties and some cooking. Pre­
1970 to bed the Everest peak during the
free import- of raw silk during a teams annually since
ferably to live-in. Private room
period from Aug. 1 to May 31, Nepal and the challenge -of the difficult Himalayan auturnn se­ in warm
family
atmosphere.
Himalayas
with the . 29,028-foot. ason last October.
Bus: 961-5511 Res: 429-6206
1975. All the silk import during
Weekends off if desired. Please
the period was to be controlled Mt. Everest: a main attraction.
call Mrs. J. Tanaka, (416) 749Next year’s 17-member
allPaul K. Asada, D.C., N.D. 6978. After 6 p.m.
exclusively by the governmentsponsored Japan iRaw Silk Cor­ women’s expedition' to Everest
•Doctor of Chiropractic”
will be led by Eiko Hisano,, a
poration.
Chartered Accountant
728A St. Clair Ave. West
The policy will restrict the veteran climber. -She was Japa­
KAZUO U. OIYE Q.C
(J4
block West of Christie)
nese team leader in the Indo-Jacountry

s
total
silk
import
dur
­
TORONTO
BARRISTER. SOL1CITOB
Suite. 409
expedition
NOTARY. PUBLIC
651-8060
Res. 621-1989
ing , June 1974 to May 1975 to panese all-women’s
130 BLOOR ST. W.
TORONTO
the
which
successfully
climbed
2 Carlton St.. Toronto
ah estimated 10,000 bale s, or 30
18,556-foot
Kailash
peak
iri
the
■ Room 1805
per cent less than a year ago,
Himalayas in May 1968,
293-4281 (Bm.)
386-6388
officials said.
CLOSE
FOR
HOLIDAYS
Mrs. Hisano also' led an all­
silk - prices in Japan’s
Raw
JULY 29 TO AUG. 13
domestic market have recently Japanese women’s team- which
JAMES KAMINO
fallen to around 9500 yen per sealed the 24,860-foot Annapur­
SHARON'S FLORISI
kilogram (one bale equals
60 na Three in May,-1970..
The
sb ^far_ clim/ Peter Sasaki
from a peaK
peak io,uuu
15,000
^“v highest
“® ^ peak
5
v
kilograms) irom
yen during the 1973 commodity j bed by women was scaled by a;
. CITY-WIDE DELIVERY
^
I
T^lrtrn'c
InnrrTran
team
from
Tokyo

s
Jungfrau
boom.
TEL. 425-2122
364-9913
Alpine. Club. Three
Japanese
M2 PAPE AVE., TOBONTO
I Some 60 per cent of. raw silk women — Mieko -Mori, Masako.
TORONTO!
1
imported to Japan comes from Uchida, and Naoko Kuribayashi j
China and 30 peri, cent from So­ — and a Sherpa porter reached .
uth Korea. Both nations
have the. summit of the 26,759-foot
been-informed of the “import ukiller Mt. Manaslu last May.
INSURANCE
nification.”
s
2239 Bloor St. West
Boom began in 1958
(At Runnymede) Toronto
Sasako Tambe, director of the
>
Phone 766-4292
20 Eglintbn Ave. East
Japanese Mountaineering AssociSuite 405, Toronto 315, Orit.
LAW OFFICE
started
ation, says the boom
OPERATED BY
Phone 485-5087
team
after a Japanese men’s
NAMIKI & TANOUYE
Home
phone: 449-9293
1958.
climbed Mt. Manaslu in
clubs
University and, amateur
Scarborough, Ontario.
proprietor
started sending out expeditions
Telephone: 431-1500
JON ONODERA
around the world.
Miniiw*
460 Dundas St. W
A six-member team led
by
489-4654 - 481-8805
rUKUT
II
Toronto 2B, Ont.
Sadako. Hosokawa became
the
(Business)
(Residence)
first all-Japanese women’s team
IT PAYS TO SHOP AT
to scale a Himalayan mountain
540 Eglinton Ave. W.,
STORE 366-5451.
FURUYA.
when it r onquered the
20,000Toronto
Fully .Airconditioned/Parking
'foot De' Tibba pealc in October,
too
Big Big Rice Sale Until Aug.
TRAVEL: 363-0655
4th.
Panasonic Corner new opened.
Try our new Thermos “AirRCA — ZENITH
picnic AUG 24 California/few seats
pot” Ideal for .your
opened
SALES & SERVICE
gift idea
Cool off with fastest thirst OCT. 16 Autumn in Japan r 4
SALES-74 MODELS T.V.
Quencher “Calpis” from Ja- weeks '
1055 MIDLAND AVE.
pan x
173 DUNDAS STREET WEST, TORONTO
(ORIOLE PLAZA)
JULY LUCKY PRIZE
DEC. Xmas/New Year
iri
364-7692
WINNERS ARE:
Japan '
>
SCARBORO Phone 759-1583
ONE HOUR FREE PARKING FOR
Mrs.
F.
Kondo,
Between Eglinton & Lawrence
OUR CUSTOMERS. AT JOY LOY
DEC. Xmas/New Year
in
E. Yamashita,
Ave/ East,
PARKING LOT. (SOUTH OF LICHEE GARDENS)
Canada
,
Mrs. T. Anderson
Repairs To All Makes

JUNN KASHINO

Ban On Free Silk

I

CLASSIFIED

Import To Save

Domestic Market

£

KIYO TAMURA

ERNEST JOMORI

T.V. Service

4.^mma

<^M/\vm

JNT Auto Service

KIMURA &
CADSBY

■1
r#

i
I

Gertrude Urabe

HYLAND
FLOWERS

I

I

TOM’S

TELEVISION

& RADIO

fa

DUNDAS UNION STORE
OPEN SUNDAY
- 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. -

■I

F

Page 3

/

PAGE 3

'Friday, Aiigust 23, 1974

Acupuncture. . .

(cont. from page 10

Funeral For Korea's First Lady Attended By P.M- Tanaka

...
Their statement' added,
“In' id.
For now, /it should be permi­
the opinion of ' three WesternSEOUL — The -murdered wi- been a gracious, gentle and -po- lie cardinal and: a Protestant mitted
only in “qualified investi­
trained surgeons and one anest­
Buddhist .
nister to join with
hesiologist who are members of gational settings,” they said, ca­ fe of the president of South ■ Ko- pular First - LadyZ •
Mrs. Park’s tomb is on the si­ monks in funeral service. Mrs.
our delegation it seems unlike­ utioning, “.Every -effort should rea, Mrs. Park Chung Hee, was
'
Park was a Buddhist.
ly that acupuncture
analgesia be made to guard against the buried here recently after a fu­ de of a hill amid a grove of pi­
Avill be widely
accepted
by conversion; of quackery in - the neral ceremony colored by; poli­ nes looking north over the Han
who
Stephen Cardinal Kim,
tical and diplomatic overtones.
•River to' Seoul.- She was buried has been a moderate critic of
Western patients who tend to • Western World.”
The major diplomatic gestu­ there with military honors. An the president, said in his pray­
: have relatively lower pain thre-,
“In China,” they
reported, re was provided by Mr. Kakuei honor guard fired three
rifle er for Mrs. Park.
sholds than do their stoic Orien­

acupuncture
is
not
practiced
Tanaka,
Prime
Minister
of
Japan
two
buglers
soun.volleys, and
tal brethren.
for money. In our Western so­ who flew over from Tokyo just ded taps.
You gave us hope when we we“It also seems that Western ciety, it should not become'a te­ for the day to attend the fune­
re in despair.
During the funeral. rites, Pre- You gave us light when we wesurgeons will demand
quieter chnique for exploitation of the ral. He met briefly with
Mr.
more relaxed patients,” they sa- public.” ■ ■ ■

: < • i. : j > Park late in the afternoon in mier Kim Jong Pil injected the re in darkness.
what officials said was a con­ first political note in his eulogy May God bring fruit from the
for .Mrs. Park. After lamenting seeds of peace sown by
her.
dolence call.
'
the
loss
of
her

elegance;
bene
­
May God help us to live by truBut Mr. Tanaka’s
presence
volence
and
wisdom,

Mr.
Kim
sting each other and to build a
was also an effort to ease the
asserted
that

our
First
Lady
new country.
“The darker color of our chips strain in relations between JaBy ROBERT MURPHY
fell
victim
to
a
diabolical
bullet
i is caused from the sugar content pan and Korea. They have beAssociated Press Writer
The prelate appeared to refJ in the potatoes we use,” said come increasingly tense over the of a assa&sian.
er,
in that last plea, to the fear,
KAHULUI,
Hawaii
The Kobayashi. “The. larger compa- last year in political disputes o•He told the guests that “the distrust and reliance on police
Kobayashi family on the island nibs use the .kind of potatoes ver the kidnapping of a Korean Communists arh bent upon' cru­
this
of Maui has a. business problem^ that ■•ntuike a white-looking chip, opposition leader Kim Dae Jung, shing1 our-peace and prosperity.” that are so noticable in
suspicion-ridden
city'.
at their potato chip
factory | ...'.which' is okay if you’re on- from Tokyo by Korean agents, He said that “we should give the
The Protestant minister, Rev.
. that ' would; be the dream -of eve- ■ ly - interested in how a
Chip and in the arrest of two Japan­ late' First Lady release by sma*ry potato chip company in the i00ks and not how it tastes.” ese in Seoul for . allegedly . hel­ shing the evil intention of the Han Kyohg Jik and the Buddhist
capitalistic world.
Lee Suh
Only nine employees and the ping to plot the overthrow of Communists while marching re- monks led by Monk
Ong, however, stayed away from '
Mr. Park.
solutely toward dur. goal.”
They produce a potato
chip three Kobayashis make up the
politics in their prayers for Mrs.
Mr. Park himself,
did not at- I
. ,
which is more expensive .-than entire work force at the small
South Korean investigators ha­ Park.
other chips ' on the
Hawaiian chip-makifig factory. The pota- tend- the funeral'or the burial ve claimed that the
assassin,
market, but which is so popular to peeling and • cutting is done service. His advisers reportedly .Mun ;Se Kwang, who was cap­
But the officials who arranged
by
machinery,
but
the
rest
is
dofeared
s
another
.
attempt
on
his
li
­
the family finds it hard to keep
tured immediately after he tri­ the national funeral had a tape
ne by hand, including the cook­ fe like the one- last Thursday ed to kill Park, has confessed un­ recording* of a radio interview
up with the demand.
in which Mrs. Park was shot by
ing, salting and packing.
dertaking the iattempt on orders with Mrs. Park broadcast for
The Kobayashis — father Yo­
Yoshio Kobayashi, the father, an assassin.
from the Communist North Ko­ the guests and the people wai­
shio, .71, and sons Dewey, 4-5,
Instead,’ the president’s 22> handles all the cooking -—- which
reans. No corroborating eviden­ ting in the steets. She asked for
and Joe, 35 — run the “family | is done every week day from 11 yearrold daughter, Keun
Hye,
support for the President, say-.
ce has yet been produced.
owned Maui Potato Chip Co.,
j p.m. to 1 p.m. The next . j day. his 20-year-old daughter, Keun
ing that “after all, he’s the one.
- whose “kitchen-cooked” chips aMr. Kim also referred indire­
15 -y ear-old-son,
Dewey and his brother Joe han­ Yong, and his
who bears the final and full re­
• re snapped up whenever they adle the mass packing and ship­ Chi Man. were the principal mo­ ctly to the current dissentions sponsibility for presidental - de­
ppear anywhere in Hawaii.
urners.
i
; in South Korea over Mr. Park’s cisions.”
ping chores.
The family began their ope­
•About 2,900 other persons, in­ assumption of unlimited power.
The plant consumes about 30 cluding about 65 foreigners, att­
ration on this island in 1957 afHe pleaded for “all-out unity”
ter being forced out of the gro­ sacks of potatoes, all imported ended the service.in front of the and “our unswerving support for
cery business
by the
large ( from California and Washington, Capitol Building; Premier Ka­ the President by following the
Buy and Sell
Your Home
chain stores. They bought ; a per day. lt’s hard to say. just kuei Tanaka of Japan was - the patriotism and loyalty of
the
Through
small one-pot cooking operation ' exactly how many bags of chips senior foreign dignitary
here. First Lady.”
and started experimenting, with we put out because it-varies so The United States was represen­
The government evidently tri­
ways to make potato chips. Af- i much,” Dewey said.
ted by Ambassador Philip
C. ed to enlist the support of Cat­
ter more than 15 years of expe- I The fuel crisis has also had Habib.
MELL REAL ESTATE Ltd.
holics and Protestants, many of
rimenting, the Kobayashis have its effect on the operation. Die­
A crowd of Koreans, estima­ whom have been among the most
2008' Lawrence Ave. East
perfected a chip unlike any ma­ sel fue 1 is used to heat the lar­ ted by police to number more
Scarboro, Ont.
vigorous dissenters against the
ss produced potato chip from the ge cooking vats, and since the than 1 million, lined the streets
757-5184
President, by inviting a Gatho. mainland — a* chip that every­ company is allocated fuel by its from the capital to the National
one in Hawaii wants, but only 1972 usage level, “company gro- Cemetery, iseven miles away.
a-few can get, ; •
. wth” is being held back.
They were mostly quiet iand
he somber as the cortege went pa­
_ ' “We produce potato chips pri­ / Kobayashi, even though
Welcome Japanese Canadian Friends
marily for the people on Maui,” makes what he _ calls “the best st, but women were dabbing the­
. said son Dewey. “Whenever we chip in the world,” is not his ir eyes, and men tried to flick
get requests from outside of this own biggest fan. He says he away their tears without being
his noticed. Mrs. Park was consi­
island, we try to fill the orders’, prefers baked potatoes to
chips.
but most of the time we can’t.'
dered, even by the president’s:
main
Special Attention on Take Out Orders
And this is the family’s
“When you look at a potato opponents and critics, to
have
problem.
for 18 hours or longer a day
362-0029 For Reservations 362-4322
and
see
nothing
but
potato
chi
­
“It’s a shame that we can’t
126 Elizabeth Street at Dundas, Toronto
but ps, you don’t want to go home
supply. everyone’s orders,
Catering to Wedding Banquets, Showers and Parties
JAPANESE
we’re a small operation. . . and and have them- on the table, no
Seating Capacity 240
that’s the key to our good pot­ matter how good they are.” ,
RESTAURANT
ato chip,”; he said. “You can’t
produce our type chip on a lar- ’
It ia a good * policy to
ge scale, believe me.”
haw the BIGHT POLICY
459 Church .St. ~
The Kobayashi’s Maui
chip,
Consult
!
Phone 924-1303
Toronto Sangiha Dana Presents
first of all, is thicker than the
William Wales Ltd.
328 Queen St. W.
conventional chip from the ma­
Insurance- Agents
Phone 863-9519
inland and it’s brownish in co­
£
Carlton
St.
10th
floor
lor, almost burnt- looking.
It’s
: Toronto .
Toronto 2-A, Ont.
usually larger and slightly britt­
Phone 368-4681
Closed On Mondays.
le too.
;
-

POTATO CHIP KING

TOM OMURA

i

KWONGCHOW CHOP
SUEY TAVERN

5’

"MICHI"

MOMIJI BALL

A Benefit Dinner-Dance ’

I'
£

SMALL

SHOE

SIZES

LATEST
ALL HEEL HEIGHTS
LADIES 2 and up.MENS ; 4-and up
MEDIUM & WIDE FITTINGS

Albert’s Shoe Store


1328 Queen St. West
Phone 531-193] Toronto

Nikko’
sukiyaki

Japanese restaurant^

Reservations: 366-2164

Seven Days A Week
Toronto* Qnt.~

For Toronto Buddhist Church Youth Building
Fund at Prince HoteU Toronto
(York Mills* West of Don Mills Rd.)
Saturday, October 5* 1974
Cocktails 6:30 p.m,
Dinner 7:00 p-m

Dancing to Archie Ginsberg & His Orchestra
$17.50 per peron
For Tickets, rail: Bob Hikida 1241-4878

jHarry Yonekura 447-6666 -

Page 4

Friday, August 23, 1974

PAGE 4

,

BOOK REVIEW: "FOLK ARTS AND CRAFTS OF JAPAN"
dyestuffs are . listed, i Crafts,” tells' us that they are Way/ then nonbeing is no lon­
FOLK ARTS AND
CRAFTS ration is the- pursuit of beauty, natural
OF JAPAN, by Kageo Muraoka say the authors; The art they Also tSe techniques of _ weaving of practical value, pleasing, co­ ger in conflict with being* and
Also, the normal no longer simply ne­
_ and Kichiemon Okamura. Wea- discuss “. . . comes under the* and the designs* used in. .these mforting and. purifying.
therhill/Hellbbnsha,
New York category sometimes referred to . multifarious textiles ' are - pre­ they have to be produced in qu­ gates the erratic.” If this is. dif­
needs ficult to apply to the subject of
and Tokyo, 19731 164 p.p. 160 ;as applied art or ndn-free art.” sented—- among.’ the kasuri alo- antity to meet people’s
-illustrations. $8.95.
•Furthermore, “. . . these-folk ar­ ne there is great variety: whi­ and they must .be produced inex­ folk crafts, the clue is given in
a quotation from the Great Su­
'
ticles are everyday
functional te, ..indigo,: multicolored;- warp pensively.
Reviewed- by
Chapter V, “The
Beauty of tra of Infinite Life (Dai muryoobjects whose principal aim is weft, warp-and-weft; . combina­
FELICIA G. BOCK
and Folk Crafts,” is rather trying. jukyo): “I will not' attain a
to fulfill the needs of ordinary- tions with stripes, teyui
people.” It does appear though, e-gasuri, etc. All these are illu­ The ' word “beauty” appears 14 state . of enlightenment until 1
folk
The problem of where
The perceive a lack of distinction be­
that since Yanagi wrote his “Ko­ strated with handsome examp­ times on the first page!
crafts end and art begins is a gei no Michi,” an entirely new- les. The techniques used in the term becomes so overused that tween good, and evil.” Unfortu­
subjective matter which is really attitude has developed
among dyed cloth of Okinawa to pro­ it nor longer holds any meaning. nately. we are left at that point.
not. resolved within the covers the Japanese toward the
Chapter VI provides “A Brief
folk duce the colorful bin-gata and Why not simply -say that folk
of this fascinating book. What crafts. Everyday articles
once aigata are also included. Tiedy­ crafts, besides being of utilita­ History of Japanese Folk Cra­
are folk arts and crafts? Does thought of as “low class” have eing, resist dyeing, leather dye­ rian value, can also be pleasing fts,” and the final chapters -ro­
the term mingei cover both ? begun to be admired and appre­ ing, and such techniques as. em­ ;to the eye, pleasing to the touch, und out the current situation in
The crafts described and depict­ ciated.
broidery and applique are like­ pretty, neat, well made, grace-, these crafts. The book as a who­
ed in this volume of the Heibonle provides us with much know­
ful, easy to hold, and so on?
The types of crafts we meet wise treated. ■
sha series on arts of Japan are
Then we come to a sentence ledge and appreciation of the
The section on woodworking
those which flourished
during with in this book are.,ceramics,
metalwork in chapter II enumerates vario­ like this: “But, when we enter painstaking work , of creative and
the Tokugawa period, in parti­ textiles, woodwork,
and folk pictures. These are co­ us kinds of woods used, as well the sphere in . which tranquility industrious persons throughout
cular and are ~ being p res erved
vered in the second chapter/ - a as techniques of making boxes, represents nobility, and normal the country, and over * many
today..'
.
chapter : extremely rich in - use- pots, ladles, dishes and conta­ mentality represents the ‘Great hundreds of years. .
In those, centuries arts and* ful information. Ceramics * are iners. Techniques of bark work,
crafts of this sort were not self- treated in great detriil,. and we bent work (magemono), carving
conscious nor created, for any­ are given a full vocabulary of lacquering and so on, are minu­ Whaling
(Confd from page 1.)
thing but utilitarian purposes. the terms in. Japanese arid En­ tely described. The joinery work
But during the-Taisho period • glish that apply to everything to make tansu chests constitutes spokesman for the Japan Wha­ ve been carried out with full
an awareness arose concerning from rough . earthenware jars to very interesting
knowledge that whales are the
here ling Association. said.
craft,
the merits of these folk creati­ fine porcelain. Not only are the well-illustrated
div. with ■
Whales were chiefly
hunted common property of all mank­
ons. The term mingei 'came into types of. ware described but the erse examples. The section on by foreign countries Tor their ind, he says. And Japan is as
use some 50 years ago, and ac- whole book is lavishly illustrated metal work is less
extensive oil- and their meat was usually eager to protect whale resour­
ces as any other country beca­
cording to Yanagi Soetsu, in his with photographs of samples of •than the other sections, dealing used as dog and cat food. .
use Japan would be the biggest
“Kogei no Michi” (The Way of ceramics of all kinds of shapes', with products made by forging
In Japan, whale meat is an
loser, if whales became extinct.
Crafts), published in 1927: “. . . many of them in color.
or casting of iron.
important food for man, which
the word mingei means popular,
Inoue believes the United StaThe section oir textiles. descri­
Bronze articles and brass (gr­ is rich in protein and it avera­ tes’ withdrawal from all whaling
utilitarian arts” (p. 11). The a- bes, giving the Japanese terms,
altar ges more than 6 per cent of all operations was not intended to
uthors of the present
volume a great variety of silks, cottons eatly used-for Buddhist
riieat consumed and equals half
point out that it does not me­ and other natural fibers —-pa-? fittings) are briefly described.
protect marine mammals.
the
amount of beef consumed by
an farmers’ arts of ethnic art per-mulberry, hemp and fibres !- Illustrations for this section, in­
"It is widely known that Athe Japanese people.
(despite th'e fact that farmers’ of arrowroot, banana,' mallow,! clude iron water kettles, a store­
merican fishermen are slaught­
house lock of- iron, tobacco pipes
Inoue says that .123,000- tons
woven raincoats and Ainu appli- daphne and
flowering fern
of iron and bamboo, and brass of whale meat was eaten by the ering as many as 300,000 dolp­
.this used to make articles of wear,
qued coats do appear in
and bamboo; an. open-work iron Japanese in 1973, who took in hins trapped in round haul tu­
book).
na hets every year,” he says.
bedding, and furnishing.
The ■ lantern and a brass candle-hold­ only half the amount of
aniWhaling for the much deplet­
These utilitarian objects, mo- methods eihployed - in * spinning er. Folk pictures include discu­ mar protein? the average Ame­
ed
humpback and blue whales
reover, are notx works of fine and weaving are discussed, and ssion of ema (votive* pictures), rican had. It would require 300,?
was forbidden in 1963 and 1964.
from Otsu-e paintings and
art in which the prime conside- the myriad colors made
doro-e, 000 tons of: unboned beef and
which were painted with opa- pork — an amount that would At present, four whale species
— the fin, sei, sperm and min­
que pigments.
be extremely difficult or impo­
ke whales — can be caught un­
The organization of this book ssible to get . in other ways in der IWC-established quotas;
well Japan.* Nor would it be easy to
is strange. It starts out
Ryozo Oyama, a Fishery Awith the defining of the term obtain that much beef or: pork
NO; DAYS
RETURNING DATE
the from other countries in these ti­ gency official, says that Japan
DEPARTURE DATE
mingei and; the scope of
is strictly observing, the regula­
subject ■ matter, at hand. The se­ mes of food shortages withoutcond chapter, outlined above, is disrupting' the international mar- tions of the IWC, which is res­
21
Sep 20 1974
. Aug 31 1974
ponsible for regulating whaling,
of great value as a handbook for ket, argues Inoue.
29
Sep 29 1974
Sep 01 1974
The United Nations Conferen- and ^s quotas on the basis of
anyone interested iri any or all
27
.Oct 25 1974
Sep 28 1974
of these crafts. However,
the «' on the Human Environment scientific evaluation. To eonser33 _
Nov. 111974
Oct. 12 1974
later chapters go on and on in­ held in Stockholm in 1972 ado-jve whales,, the IWC limits the
30
Nov 29 1974
Nov 01 1974 * s
to a generalized - discussion of pted a resolution calling for a size, kind, location and season
49
Jan 12.1975
Nov 24 1974 i
of whale hunting.
what constitutes folk arts and 10-year moratorium on commer­
33
Jan 24 1975
Dec 22 1974
It is more provoking to see
folk crafts, and then (in Chap­ cial whaling.
the . self-righteousness of
antiHAWAII $399 FROM TORONTO
ters V-VII); into a philosophi­
'But the scientific committee
whaling
campaigners,
who
belie
­
cal' treatise on esthetics', though and the* plenary session of the
not under any such title. Chap­ International ; Whaling Commis­ ve that it is right to demand
ter IV, "Characteristics of Folk sion, which met in London shor­ a ban on whaling and that it
Vancouver
'Toronto
to
tly after the Stockholm' confe­ is inhumane and. barbarous
hunt
whales,
Inoue
said;
254-5101
869-1291
rence, rejected the resolution as
1115 East Hastings St
"I think the energies of the
Res. 762-4742
not based on scientific evidence.
Ay$, Vancouver 6, B.C.
antiwhaling campaigners would
162 SPADINA
Similarly, at the Internation­ be far better spent in their stu­
al-Conference on the Biology- of dy of the history of’ racial dis­
the Whales held in Washington crimination and the present' si­
in 1971, mammalogists, and bio- tuations in their own. countries .
metristsfrom all over the wor­ to broaden their horizon,” he a- '
ld concluded . that the conserva­ dded.
FISHING
tionists, contention that all wha­
People simply cannot live on
672 NO. 3 ROAD. RICHMOND. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA
AND ADDIDAS
les were being threatened with
vegetables alone. They must ha­
extinction due to indiscriminate
' 1201Bloor Street West
ve animal protein, such as beef,
killing was scientifically - unso­
Toronto, Ont. .
pork and - mutton and -the ’need
und.
' 532-4267
to utilize these animals cannot
-GROUP DEPARTURE TOjAPAN
Japan’s, whaling operations ha- be denied.
SEPT. 26 — OCT. 23 .
Whales, too, should be effecti­
NOV. 8 — NOV. 29
OCT. 4 - - OCT. 25
vely utilized, just like cattle, -ho­
NOV.
24

DEC.
17
gs arid- other animals,; provided
NOV. 17 — DEC. 13
DEC. 19 — JAN. 4
that' every care is taken to ma- .
NOV. 24 — TAN. 23
intain their stocks high enough
DEC.-29 — JAN. 19
C.R.C.A. — MEMBER — O.R.C.A.
levels through scientific* mana­
For . further - details , and reservations
FLAT ROOFING
SHEET METAL WORK
gement..
*
Please Call or -write to: SHINGLING
.
EAVESTROUGHING
ALCAN ALUMINUM .
'
STELCO STEEL
Times Square Travel Centre Ltd

JAPAN TOURS’74

K. Iwata Travel Service

OSCAR'S
SPORT SHOP

TRAVEL CENTRE NEWS

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672 No. 3 Rd,

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*

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421-3374 —
METRO LIC. B-124

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— 291-1673.
NISEI OWNED.

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421-1259 < .
(TORONTO)

Page 5

PAGE 5

NEW

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■. Friday, August -23, 1974

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AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DISHES
MICHI" RESTAURANT
459

CHURCi

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328 QUEEN ST. WEST,

PHONE 924-1303
PHONE 863-9519

3

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620 Sheppard Ave~ West
at Bathurst, .Toronto,
Tel. 630-3270

Page 6

Friday, August 23, 1974-

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